Book Image

Implementing DevSecOps Practices

By : Vandana Verma Sehgal
Book Image

Implementing DevSecOps Practices

By: Vandana Verma Sehgal

Overview of this book

DevSecOps is built on the idea that everyone is responsible for security, with the goal of safely distributing security decisions at speed and scale to those who hold the highest level of context. This practice of integrating security into every stage of the development process helps improve both the security and overall quality of the software. This book will help you get to grips with DevSecOps and show you how to implement it, starting with a brief introduction to DevOps, DevSecOps, and their underlying principles. After understanding the principles, you'll dig deeper into different topics concerning application security and secure coding before learning about the secure development lifecycle and how to perform threat modeling properly. You’ll also explore a range of tools available for these tasks, as well as best practices for developing secure code and embedding security and policy into your application. Finally, you'll look at automation and infrastructure security with a focus on continuous security testing, infrastructure as code (IaC), protecting DevOps tools, and learning about the software supply chain. By the end of this book, you’ll know how to apply application security, safe coding, and DevSecOps practices in your development pipeline to create robust security protocols.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
1
Part 1:DevSecOps – What and How?
3
Part 2: DevSecOps Principles and Processes
8
Part 3:Technology
15
Part 4: Tools
17
Part 5: Governance and an Effective Security Champions Program
20
Part 6: Case Studies and Conclusion

Tools involved in chaos engineering

The following is a list of some popular tools used in chaos engineering practices:

  • Chaos Monkey: Originally developed by Netflix, Chaos Monkey randomly terminates virtual machine instances and containers to ensure that engineers implement their services to be resilient to instance failures (https://github.com/Netflix/chaosmonkey).
  • Chaos Toolkit: Chaos Toolkit is a simple and extensible toolkit for chaos engineering experiments. It has a clear focus on the user’s objectives and provides a way to define, execute, and analyze experiments (https://chaostoolkit.org).
  • Gremlin: Gremlin provides a full suite of tools to perform chaos engineering experiments safely and securely across a variety of platforms, including Kubernetes, AWS, GCP, and Azure.
  • Litmus: Litmus is a Kubernetes-native chaos engineering tool that helps teams identify weaknesses in their deployments. It offers a variety of chaos experiments for various infra components...